Victoria Fuller

Victoria Fuller

About Victoria Fuller

Victoria Fuller has an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and fellowship awards from the Colorado Council on the Arts and Humanities, and the Illinois Arts Council. She also received an Illinois Arts Council CAAP Grant, and was a resident artist at Sculpture Space in Utica, NY and Ragdale Foundation in Lake Forest, IL. Her large-scale public sculpture “Shoe of Shoes” is in the collection of Caleres Shoes in St. Louis. Her sculptures have been commissioned by Sound Transit in Seattle, Comed in Chicago, and Arts in Transit in St, Louis. She has been featured in Sculpture Magazine, Bad at Sports, Hyperallergic, American Scientific Blog, The Seattle Times, The Chicago Tribune, Chicago Tribune Magazine, Hello Magazine, TWA Inflight Magazine, and Western Art and Architecture Magazine, and her work is featured in the book, “Star Spangled,” Featherweight Press, and the book, “Somewhere In-Between Chicago,” 2018 by Chester Alamo Costello. In 2016 she was featured in Sculpture Magazine’s May issue, as part of the show “Disruption” at Grounds For Sculpture in Hamilton, NJ. Her most recent large-scale public sculpture, titled ”Canoe Fan,” is installed along the Huron River in Ann Arbor, MI ..........................................................................................................................................................................................
Artist Statement: “As an artist, I allow myself to explore many different avenues and mediums of expression. My artwork materials and subjects vary. I play with both man–made appropriated object assembled into sculpture, sometimes indirectly reflecting forms found in nature, and also some incorporating direct depictions of nature. My common object assemblage work illuminates inherent interactions between industrial design and the natural world, opening a dialogue about human interaction with nature, the influence of nature on humans, humans on nature and the delicate balance of that interaction. Fascinated by forms that have been created for utility and function, everyday objects are an inspiration, but nature is the binding principle behind my work. I don’t limit myself to one genre or the other. Having studied natural science illustration I often gravitate towards making intricate studies of nature, but I also am pulled to finding objects and putting them together into forms that reflect nature. I like to explore different avenues while focusing on both natural and human systems and looking for the correlation or opposition in the comparisons. A recent exploration looks at human systems, using weather, bathymetric and constellation maps, and aerial views of subdivisions.”